My Scene were an American series of fashion dolls created by Mattel in 2002. Mattel's Barbie character is one of the dolls in the My Scene line, and the My Scene dolls have slim bodies similar to earlier Barbie dolls, but with larger heads.The New York Times described their features as "exaggerated lips and bulging, makeup-caked eyes." My Scene were designed to appeal to the tween market and compete with the Bratz dolls from MGA Entertainment. The series originally consisted of three female characters, but was expanded to eventually include ten different dolls.
The My Scene series of dolls was first introduced in the fall season of 2002, before the 2002 Flavas, to compete with the Flava dolls. It originally included three dolls: Barbie, Madison, and Chelsea, with different ethnicities and personalities, and 2 extra fashions for each character. The characters (except Barbie) were named after different locations in New York City. More dolls were eventually added to the series, starting with in 2003 with Nolee, and three male characters, Bryant, River, and Hudson. Delancey and Ellis premiered in the "Hanging Out" line, which debuted in late 2003. Kenzie debuted in the "Getting Ready Line" of 2004 and Nia debuted in 2008. There are seven characters in the My Scene series (Kennedy, Madison, Chelsea, Delancey, Nia, Hudson, and River), six discontinued characters (Barbie, Nolee, Kenzie, Bryant, Ellis, and Sutton) and four special edition dolls (Lindsay, Jai, Tyson and Ryan). Each of the My Scene girls (and three of the boys) own pets.
Scene (from Greek σκηνή skēnḗ) may refer to:
The scene subculture is a contemporary subculture which has been common in the United States, Europe, Asia, and Latin America from the late 2000s until the mid 2010s. People (most often in their teens to 20s) involved in this style are called "scene people," "scene kids," "trendies" or sometimes "scenesters" in the US, "moshers," "chavmos," or "chemos" in the UK, "coloridos" in Latin America, and "shamate" in China.
The scene subculture began in United Kingdom during the late 1990s and early 2000s when some members of the chav subculture began to experiment with alternative fashion, and took fashionable characteristics of indie pop, emo, rave music, and punk fashions. The fashion originally included typical pop punk and skater clothing like tripp pants, stripes, tartan, spiky hair, Chucks, Vans, and trucker hats derived from grunge and skate punk fashion. Older punks and skaters, however, looked down on these young trendies (as they were then called) for their inauthenticity and inability to skate.
The Scene Club was a 1960s music venue in Ham Yard, 41 Great Windmill Street, Soho, central London, England. The club opened in 1963 and was associated with the mod youth subculture.
Bands that appeared at the club included the Rolling Stones and The Who.
What's my scene still tryin' to find my scene
What's my scene still tryin' to find my scene
Yeah
I saw some hippies, they were laying in the park
They were just passing around the joint and playing the guitar
So I, asked if I could join them (do you guys mind if I hang out for a lil bit?)
They said sure, and complimented my aura
I said thanks and sat right down
Pulled the hash pipe out and relaxed myself for hours straight
Sat around baked and it felt great
We talked shit and made pictures out of cloud shapes
we talked about the tofu, no shoes, folk tunes and all the protests that they don't do
Smoking doobies and talking 'bout the reason we were saving the entire world, then we went and fired twelve
Later that night we were sitting in the same spot, made up my mind, figured I'd take off
I asked 'em all "so what else do you guys do?"
They looked surprised "this is it, we get high"
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
As I was walking from the park where the hippies were, I bumped into a bunch of drunks wearing business shirts
And they just finished work, having a well earned drink and they mistook me for some dude they used to work with
Greg
Yeah they kept calling me Greg
I thought Well I could be Greg, at least for the weekend, and just pretend to be what a sweet plan
We could be friends, at the time it made complete sense
We went into a bar where we drank, and we talked about all that money sitting in the bank, and our job
A stock in the economy as well, and the best time to go and buy a property and sell
And all the ways that money could be spent
A trend started to form I was bored so I said, "well, I'm looking for a scene, and this one isn't it"
Lifted and heard em whispering "Greg seems different"
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
It's the hardest thing to do
To look like them but feel like you
It's the hardest thing to do... (uh-huh, uh-huh)
It's the hardest thing to do
To look like them but feel like you
It's the hardest thing to do
(Look)
Rocked up to a party with some cheap beer
I thought "yeah, I could easily find a scene here"
A bunch of dudes challenged me to some halo
I said okay but I've never really played though
I saw some pretty little hipsters in the corner, who told me that their favourite bands were ones that hadn't formed yet
I talked to lawyers dressed as sharks, or maybe sharks dressed as lawyers, either way I felt unsafe in the water
I was chilling with gym junkies, talking bout their gym past spin class, sipping slim fast from a hip flask, told a guy thought we looked the same, didn't think he'd take offense
Pretty weird I think he said his name was Greg
I must've tried at least hundred different scenes but I aint never found one that's really me nah
Maybe I'm a weirdo, or maybe they're the weird ones, or maybe I don't really even need one
But I'm still,
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my scene, still tryin' to find my scene
What's my, still tryin' to find my scene